PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

AADOCR announces 2023 AADOCR Hatton Competition and Award Winners

2023-04-03
(Press-News.org) Alexandria, VA – The American Association for Dental, Oral, and Craniofacial Research (AADOCR) has announced the winners of the 2023 AADOCR Hatton Competition. The winners were recognized during the Opening Ceremonies of the 52nd Annual Meeting of the AADOCR, which was held in conjunction with the 47th Annual Meeting of the Canadian Association for Dental Research (CADR), that took place on March 15, 2023.

The Hatton Award was first presented as the "Novice Award" in 1953 and is the oldest IADR/AADOCR Award. The name was changed to the Edward H. Hatton Award in 1957 to honor IADR past president Edward H. Hatton. The competition is designed to provide an opportunity for the best junior investigators from all IADR Divisions and Sections to present their research at the annual IADR General Session. A major goal of the IADR Hatton Competition and Awards is to give as many students and new investigators as possible access to the IADR General Session, as well as the experience to present their research to a global audience. 

Candidates presented their research in a closed-door competition on Tuesday, March 14, 2023. 
All IADR Division competitors, including the six winners from the American Division (AADOCR), will compete in the IADR Hatton Competition on June 20, 2023, at the IADR/LAR General Session & Exhibition with WCPD in Bogotá, Colombia.

The winners are:

JUNIOR CATEGORY
1st – Michael Troka
Identification of Disease-Driving Cell Signaling Interactions in scRNAseq Data
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia

2nd – Kisa Iqbal
LSD1-Induced Signaling Mechanisms Inhibition Sensitizes Oral Cancer for Chemotherapy and Immunotherapy
Boston University, MA

SENIOR CATEGORY
1st – Armond June
The Implications of Periodontitis on the Oral-Gut Microbiome Axis
University at Buffalo, NY

2nd – Emily Fisher
Wnt/β-Catenin Epigenetic Modifications Drive Age-Dependent Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma Evolution
Boston University, MA

POST-DOCTORAL CATEGORY
1st – Marwa Afifi 
Myc Loss Mediates Oncogene-induced Senescence in Oral Premalignant Lesions
National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD

2nd – Justin Burrell
Human Gingival-Derived NCSCs Enhance Functional Recovery Following Nerve Fusion
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia

About AADOCR
The American Association for Dental, Oral, and Craniofacial Research (AADOCR) is a nonprofit organization with a mission to drive dental, oral, and craniofacial research to advance health and well-being. AADOCR represents the individual scientists, clinician-scientists, dental professionals, and students based in academic, government, non-profit, and private-sector institutions who share our mission. AADOCR is the largest division of the International Association for Dental Research. Learn more at www.aadocr.org.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

AADOCR announces Winners of the 2023 AADOCR/CADR Joseph Lister Award for New Investigators

2023-04-03
Alexandria, VA – The American Association for Dental, Oral, and Craniofacial Research (AADOCR) has announced the winners of the 2023 AADOCR/CADR Joseph Lister Award for New Investigators. The winners were recognized during the Opening Ceremonies of the 52nd Annual Meeting of the AADOCR, which was held in conjunction with the 47th Annual Meeting of the Canadian Association for Dental Research (CADR), that took place on March 15, 2023. First given in 2018, the AADOCR/CADR Joseph Lister Award for New Investigators is managed by AADOCR and supported by Johnson & Johnson Consumer, Inc. It was created to award young investigators ...

AADOCR announces Winners of the 2023 Student Competition for Advancing Dental Research Application (SCADA)

2023-04-03
Alexandria, VA – The American Association for Dental, Oral, and Craniofacial Research (AADOCR) has announced the winners of the 2023 Student Competition for Advancing Dental Research Application (SCADA). The winners were recognized during the Opening Ceremonies of the 52nd Annual Meeting of the AADOCR, which was held in conjunction with the 47th Annual Meeting of the Canadian Association for Dental Research (CADR), that took place on March 15, 2023. In 2017, AADOCR and Dentsply Sirona joined forces to co-sponsor SCADA, which was previously known as the Student Clinicians of ...

Smart watches could predict higher risk of heart failure

2023-04-03
Wearable devices such as smart watches could be used to detect a higher risk of developing heart failure and irregular heart rhythms in later life, suggests a new study led by UCL researchers. The peer-reviewed study, published in The European Heart Journal – Digital Health, looked at data from 83,000 people who had undergone a 15-second electrocardiogram (ECG) comparable to the kind carried out using smart watches and phone devices. The researchers identified ECG recordings containing extra heart beats which are usually benign but, if they occur frequently, are linked to conditions such as heart failure and arrhythmia ...

Cold is beneficial for healthy aging

Cold is beneficial for healthy aging
2023-04-03
Cold activates a cellular cleansing mechanism that breaks down harmful protein aggregations responsible for various diseases associated with aging. In recent years, studies on different model organisms have already shown that life expectancy increases significantly when body temperature is lowered. However, precisely how this works has still been unclear in many areas. A research team at the University of Cologne’s CECAD Cluster of Excellence in Aging Research has now unlocked one responsible mechanism. The study ‘Cold ...

Tiny eye movements are under a surprising degree of cognitive control

2023-04-03
A very subtle and seemingly random type of eye movement called ocular drift can be influenced by prior knowledge of the expected visual target, suggesting a surprising level of cognitive control over the eyes, according to a study led by Weill Cornell Medicine neuroscientists. The discovery, described Apr. 3 in Current Biology, adds to the scientific understanding of how vision—far from being a mere absorption of incoming signals from the retina—is controlled and directed by cognitive processes. “These ...

Griffin Charitable Foundation donates $71,000 to the Masonic Medical Research Institute

Griffin Charitable Foundation donates $71,000 to the Masonic Medical Research Institute
2023-04-03
UTICA, NY –A $71,000 donation by the Griffin Charitable Foundation, based in Rome, New York, was awarded to the Masonic Medical Research Institute (MMRI) to purchase a new state-of-the-art microscope for imaging cells. “It came as wonderful news that the Foundation pledged this generous donation,” said Stephen F. Izzo, MMRI’s Development Director. “This gift will make a profound impact on our research capabilities.”  The Griffin Charitable Foundation supports not-for-profit entities serving Rome and select organizations ...

Patients with schizophrenia have favorable surgical risk, opening the door for ethical consideration of neurosurgical interventions like Deep Brain Stimulation

2023-04-03
AURORA, Colo. (April 3, 2023) – A study published in Frontiers in Surgery finds that people with schizophrenia (SZ) and schizoaffective disorder (SAD) have overall lower surgical risk than people with Parkinson’s disease, which is reassuring when considering potential surgical interventions such as Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS) for the treatment of SZ and SAD. DBS, a procedure that implants electrodes in the deeper structures of the brain connected to generators in the chest, is rare in treating SZ and ...

A 21st-century remedy for missed meds

A 21st-century remedy for missed meds
2023-04-03
HOUSTON – (April 3, 2023) – Missing crucial doses of medicines and vaccines could become a thing of the past thanks to Rice University bioengineers’ next-level technology for making time-released drugs. “This is a huge problem in the treatment of chronic disease,” said Kevin McHugh, corresponding author of a study about the technology published online in Advanced Materials. “It’s estimated that 50% of people don't take their medications correctly. With this, you’d give them one shot, and they’d be all set for the next couple of months.” When patients fail to take prescription medicine or take it incorrectly, the costs can ...

Research suggests avenues toward gene therapies for polycystic kidney disease

2023-04-03
New Haven, Conn. — Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) is the most common potentially lethal genetic disease—about a half million people in the United States alone suffer from the condition. There is no cure, but new research could open the door to new gene therapies for treating most cases of the disease. For several decades, researchers have known that mutations in the PKD1 gene, which encodes the polycystin-1 (PC1) protein, can cause the disease in about 80% of cases. However, the protein is too big to be modified through gene therapy strategies. Now, a research ...

New research shows that bacteria get “hangry," too

New research shows that bacteria get “hangry, too
2023-04-03
Have you ever been so hungry that you become angry, otherwise known as “hangry?” New research by Adam Rosenthal, PhD, assistant professor in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology, has found that some bacteria cells get hangry too, releasing harmful toxins into our bodies and making us sick. Rosenthal and his colleagues from Harvard, Princeton and Danisco Animal Nutrition discovered, using a recently developed technology, that genetically identical cells within a bacterial community have different functions, with some members behaving more docile and others producing the very toxins that make us feel ill. “Bacteria behave much more ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Making the weight in four years

AI review unveils new strategies for fixing missing traffic data in smart cities

Scientists discovered hopfion crystals – which are flying in spacetime

For bees, diet isn’t one-size-fits-all

How a malaria-fighting breakthrough provides lasting protection

Cognitive Behavioural therapy can alter brain structure and boost grey matter volume, study shows

Largest ever study into cannabis use investigates risk of paranoia and poor mental health in the general population

Most US neurologists prescribing MS drugs have received pharma industry cash

A growing baby planet photographed for first time in a ring of darkness

Brain’s immune cells key to wiring the adolescent brain

KAIST develops AI that automatically detects defects in smart factory manufacturing processes even when conditions change​

Research alert: Alcohol opens the floodgates for bad bacteria

American Gastroenterological Association, Latica partner to assess living guidelines using real-world evidence

University of Tennessee collaborates on NSF grants to improve outcomes through AI

New technique at HonorHealth Research Institute uses ultrasound to activate drugs targeting pancreatic cancer

Companies 'dumbed down' cryptocurrency disclosures in good markets prior to reporting standardization, Rotman research finds

MSU study: What defines a life well-lived? Obituaries may have the answers.

Wind isn’t the only threat: USF-led scientists urge shift to more informed hurricane scale

Study: Fossils reveal reliable record of marine ecosystem functioning

New Simon Fraser University–University of Exeter partnership fast-tracks path to become a lawyer

Busy bees can build the right hive from tricky foundations

Deep sea worm fights ‘poison with poison’ to survive high arsenic and sulfide levels

New monthly pill shows potential as pre-exposure prophylaxis HIV drug candidate

Estalishing power through divine portrayal and depictions of violence

Planetary scientist decodes clues in Bennu’s surface composition to make sense of far-flung asteroids

For students with severe attention difficulties, changing school shifts is not the solution

Novel virtual care program enhances at-home support for people with heart failure

Giving mRNA vaccines a technological shot in the arm

Study IDs what can help collaborative groups actually accomplish their goals

Simpler models can outperform deep learning at climate prediction

[Press-News.org] AADOCR announces 2023 AADOCR Hatton Competition and Award Winners